conference

2025 Global Technology Summit

April 10, 2025 - April 12, 2025
New Delhi

The ninth Global Technology Summit (GTS), co-hosted with the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India, was held from April 10 to 12, 2025 in New Delhi, with public sessions on April 11 and 12.

The summit's theme, Sambhavna—meaning "possibilities" in Hindi—highlighted the transformative potential of critical and emerging technologies to drive economic growth while shaping international relations, security frameworks, and global governance. The Summit explored the potential of technology partnerships to unlock new opportunities for innovation and growth. The theme also embodied a broader vision of building a resilient digital ecosystem that enhances India's status as a global tech leader while ensuring that technological advancements help bridge societal divides, creating a more equitable and prosperous future for all.

The Summit convened industry experts, policymakers, and academics from around the world to explore topics such as the geopolitics of technology, artificial intelligence, digital public infrastructure, India’s tech evolution, cybersecurity, international tech collaborations, and data governance.

For more information:  globaltechnologysummit.com

Watch all the discussions from GTS 2025 here.

The ninth Global Technology Summit (GTS), co-hosted with the Ministry of External Affairs, Government of India, was held from April 10 to 12, 2025 in New Delhi, with public sessions on April 11 and 12.

The summit's theme, Sambhavna—meaning "possibilities" in Hindi—highlighted the transformative potential of critical and emerging technologies to drive economic growth while shaping international relations, security frameworks, and global governance. The Summit explored the potential of technology partnerships to unlock new opportunities for innovation and growth. The theme also embodied a broader vision of building a resilient digital ecosystem that enhances India's status as a global tech leader while ensuring that technological advancements help bridge societal divides, creating a more equitable and prosperous future for all.

The Summit convened industry experts, policymakers, and academics from around the world to explore topics such as the geopolitics of technology, artificial intelligence, digital public infrastructure, India’s tech evolution, cybersecurity, international tech collaborations, and data governance.

For more information:  globaltechnologysummit.com

Watch all the discussions from GTS 2025 here.

  • April 11, 2025
  • April 12, 2025
April 11, 2025
Welcome Remarks
Speaker
 

Rudra Chaudhuri

Director
Carnegie India
Inaugural Address and Conversation
Speaker
 

S. Jaishankar

External Affairs Minister of India
Moderator
 

Rudra Chaudhuri

Director
Carnegie India
Panel: Can Politics Meet Opportunity: The Future of Technology Partnerships
Speakers
 

Samir Saran

President
Observer Research Foundation
 

Nivruti Rai

Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer
Invest India
 

Ashley J. Tellis

Tata Chair for Strategic Affairs & Senior Fellow
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
 

Thorsten Benner

Co-Founder and Director
Global Public Policy Institute
Moderator
 

Lindsey W. Ford

Senior Fellow
ORF America
Keynote Address: AI: A Reality Check
Speaker
 

Nandan Nilekani

Chairman and Co-founder, Infosys and Founding Chairman
UIDAI (Aadhaar)
Conversation: AI, DPI, The Future of Technology
Speaker
 

Nandan Nilekani

Chairman and Co-founder, Infosys and Founding Chairman
UIDAI (Aadhaar)
Moderator
 

Janka Oertel

Director, Asia Programme & Senior Policy Fellow
European Council of Foreign Relations
Keynote Address: ‘Sambhavna’: The State of Geopolitics of Technology

Technology has become a key battleground in global geopolitics, influencing economic strength, national security, and international relationships. Countries are adopting distinct regulatory approaches while competing for leadership in AI, semiconductors, quantum computing, cybersecurity, and 5G. Europe is focusing on strict regulations and strategic investments, while the United States maintains a more market-driven, less interventionist stance. In contrast, China is advancing its tech ambitions through state-backed enterprises, and India is leveraging its Digital Public Infrastructure model and strategic alliances by balancing collaboration with major global players while asserting its own regulatory direction. Beyond governments, Big Tech firms, semiconductor leaders, and AI innovators are not only adapting to these shifts but also actively shaping policies, supply chains, and the future of technology itself.

Speaker
 

Sunil Kant Munjal

Chairman
Hero Enterprise
Panel: ‘Sambhavna’: The State of Geopolitics of Technology
Speakers
 

Debjani Ghosh

Distinguished Fellow
NITI Aayog
 

Tarun Chhabra

Former Deputy Assistant to the President and Coordinator for Technology and National Security
National Security Council, U.S.
 

Brendan Dowling

Ambassador for Cyber Affairs and Critical Technology, Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade
Government of Australia
 

Jon Simonsson

Senior Director, Prime Minister’s Office
Sweden
 

Antony Cook

Corporate Vice President and Deputy General Counsel
Microsoft
 

Sebastian Niles

President & Chief Legal Officer
Salesforce
Moderator
 

Srinath Raghavan

Nonresident Senior Fellow
Carnegie India
Conversation: Tech Bridges: India-EU Tech Cooperation

The India-EU tech cooperation spans critical areas like artificial intelligence, quantum computing, semiconductors, and green energy. Through initiatives such as the Trade and Technology Council (TTC), both partners are strengthening research, policy alignment, and investment to foster a future-ready digital economy. This collaboration not only enhances bilateral trade but also paves the way for global standards in technology governance.

Speakers
 

Ajay Kumar Sood

Principal Scientific Adviser to the Government of India
 

Piyush Srivastava

Additional Secretary, Europe (West)
Ministry of External Affairs, India
Moderator
 

Garima Mohan

Senior Fellow, Indo-Pacific Program
German Marshall Fund of the United States
Panel: Demystifying Deepseek: The Future of AI

DeepSeek has disrupted the AI landscape by achieving benchmark performances rivaling leading AI models like OpenAI's GPT 4 at a fraction of the cost. DeepSeek also claims to have leveraged fewer and less advanced computer chips while facing US export controls. Sustainable funding from its parent company (a Chinese hedge fund) without immediate profitability pressure allows DeepSeek to focus on fundamental research on artificial general intelligence while offering its models as open source—a key feature of its success. This strategy created a domestic alternative to Western AI products for the Chinese market. At the same time, rival AI companies claim that DeepSeek used “distillation” techniques (refers to extracting knowledge from a larger AI model) to train its model. Further, security concerns loom large. Global regulators—from Italy, Taiwan, Ireland to Australia—have raised alarms about DeepSeek's data practices, with several countries banning or restricting its use. India's Finance Ministry has warned against using such tools on official devices, citing data confidentiality risks.

Speakers
 

Mihir Goyal

Machine Learning Engineer
Wadhwani AI
 

Amith Singhee

Director, IBM Research India & Chief Technology Officer
IBM India & South Asia
 

Shikoh Gitau

Chief Executive Officer
Qhala
 

Raj Shukla

Member
Union Public Service Commission
 

Arvind Gupta

Director
Vivekananda International Foundation
Moderator
 

Vrinda Kapoor

Chief Executive Officer
3rditech
Conversation: U.S-India Technology Cooperation: Take Stock
Speaker
 

Tarun Chhabra

Former Deputy Assistant to the President and Coordinator for Technology and National Security
National Security Council, U.S.
Moderator
 

Rudra Chaudhuri

Director
Carnegie India
Panel: TRUST: A New Playbook for U.S.-India Strategic Technology Cooperation

The newly announced TRUST framework serves as an inflection point when it comes to India's bilateral engagement with the United States. Both parties have seemingly opted for an integrated approach to technology cooperation, with trade issues such as market access and tariff barriers now finding a mention in the joint statement as well. However, the TRUST framework is not just a change in nomenclature but also reflects the evolving sensibilities of both the U.S.-India bilateral relations and the larger geopolitical dynamic surrounding both countries, with a more ambitious and tone-setting agenda in areas such as AI, pharmaceuticals, semiconductors, and nuclear cooperation.

Speakers
 

Sushil Pal

Joint Secretary, Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology
Government of India
 

Ashley J. Tellis

Tata Chair for Strategic Affairs & Senior Fellow
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
 

Siddharth Mittal

Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director
Biocon
 

Rob Sherman

Vice President, Policy & Deputy Chief Privacy Officer
Meta
 

John Neuffer

President and Chief Executive Officer
Semiconductor Industry Association
 

Indrani Bagchi

Chief Executive Officer
Ananta Centre
Moderator
 

Rudra Chaudhuri

Director
Carnegie India
Ministerial Conversation
Speaker
 

Piyush Goyal

Minister of Commerce and Industry
Government of India
Moderator
 

Janka Oertel

Director, Asia Programme & Senior Policy Fellow
European Council of Foreign Relations
Video Message
Speaker
 

Amandeep Singh Gill

United Nations Secretary-General’s Envoy on Technology
Panel: The Promise of Artificial Intelligence

The original promise of artificial intelligence was rooted in the vision of machines that could mimic human intelligence. Now, with advanced AI models replicating human reasoning, learning and problem-solving capabilities, we are at a fork in the road. More than just a boast of human ingenuity, AI could also help achieve sustainable development goals. Recent breakthroughs from companies like DeepSeek also highlight the possibility of building advanced AI in a cost-effective and energy-efficient way. Further, as governments around the world advance their own visions for sovereign AI, there’s a growing concern about a fragmented approach to AI governance.

Speakers
 

Abhishek Singh

Additional Secretary, Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology
Government of India
 

Stefan Schnorr

State Secretary, Federal Ministry for Digital and Transport
Germany
 

Sabastian Niles

President & Chief Legal Officer
Salesforce
 

Sandeep Aurora

Group Director & Head, Public Policy & Government Affairs
Microsoft
 

Aditi Jha

Board Director & Country Head, Legal and Government Affairs
LinkedIn India
 

Rohit Chauhan

Head, Corporate Affairs
Tata Consultancy Services
 

Shalini Kapoor

Volunteer
Ekstep Foundatio
Author
AI for You
Moderator
 

Amlan Mohanty

Nonresident Research Fellow
Carnegie India
Panel: AI & Cybersecurity: Opportunities and Risks

AI is reshaping the cybersecurity landscape, presenting both significant opportunities and emerging threats. On one hand, AI enhances cyber defence by improving threat detection, identifying potential disruptions to critical infrastructure, and strengthening vulnerability assessments. On the other hand, it also introduces new risks, such as AI-driven social engineering attacks, disinformation campaigns, advanced malware, and novel cyber threats that could bypass traditional security measures. Beyond these dual implications, ensuring the cybersecurity of AI models themselves has become increasingly crucial as they evolve into general-purpose tools widely used across sectors. As a result, both governments and industries at the forefront of AI innovation must carefully and collaboratively navigate the intersection of AI and cybersecurity to harness AI’s potential while mitigating its risks to cyber infrastructure.

Speakers
 

Katherine Prizeman

Political Affairs Officer
United Nations Office for Disarmament Affairs
 

Maria Adebahr

Director for Cyber Foreign and Security Policy, Federal Foreign Office
Germany
 

Ernst Noorman

Ambassador at Large for Cyber Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Netherlands
 

Heli Tiirmaa-Klaar

Chair of IT Coalition, UDCG Ramstein & Visiting Distinguished Fellow
German Marshall Fund of the United States
 

M. U. Nair

National Cybersecurity Coordinator
Government of India
 

Yatin Katyal

Vice President, Data Scientist AI Products
Mastercard
 

Sachin Kakkar

India Site Lead, Privacy, Safety, Security
Google
Moderator
 

Jyotsna Jayaram

Partner
Trilegal
Panel: State of the World

The world today is undergoing significant shifts, marked by intensifying geopolitical tensions and evolving power dynamics. The United Nations General Assembly recently passed a resolution condemning Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, calling for an immediate withdrawal of Russian forces. However, the vote revealed fractures in global alliances, with the U.S. aligning more closely with Russian interests, diverging from its traditional European partners. This shift in the U.S. foreign policy has compelled the Europeans to consider increasing defence autonomy and reevaluate the Transatlantic partnership. In the Middle East, ceasefires in Gaza remain fragile, with ongoing violence threatening regional stability and prompting urgent diplomatic interventions. Meanwhile, China continues to expand its global influence, leveraging strategic investments and technological advancements to challenge Western economic dominance. Amid these global transformations, India is carefully navigating its strategic positioning, maintaining diplomatic balance while asserting its autonomy on key international issues.

Speakers
 

D. B. Venkatesh Varma

Distinguished Fellow
Vivekananda International Foundation
 

Lisa Curtis

Senior Fellow and Director, Indo-Pacific Security Program
Center for New American Security
 

Thorsten Benner

Co-founder and Director
Global Public Policy Institute
 

Bonnie S. Glaser

Managing Director, Indo-Pacific Program
German Marshall Fund of the United States
 

Gaddam Dharmendra

Nonresident Senior Fellow
Carnegie India
 

Hervé Delphin

Ambassador of the European Union to India and Bhutan
Moderator
 

C. Raja Mohan

Advisor
Council for Strategic and Defense Research
April 12, 2025
Panel: “Tariffied” World: T minus 90
Speakers
 

Ashley J. Tellis

Tata Chair for Strategic Affairs & Senior Fellow
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
 

Björn Conrad

CEO and Co-founder
Sinolytics
 

Evan A. Feigenbaum

Vice President for Studies
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
 

Rosa Balfour

Director
Carnegie Europe
 

Shruti Rajagopalan

Senior Research Fellow
Mercatus Center
Moderator
 

Arun K. Singh

Nonresident Senior Fellow
Carnegie India
Panel: Guardians of Galaxy: Space Security Norms and Partnerships

Space assets serve both civilian and military purposes, making them dual-use technologies. While they bring significant benefits, they can also be exploited for hostile activities. As space technologies become integral to statecraft and national security, the rise of Astropolitics—the geopolitical contest in space—has escalated the risk of conflicts, threatening space security. The rapid commercialization of space has introduced new actors, including private sector, driving innovation but also introducing new security challenges. These tech advancements have outpaced existing international space laws, creating uncertainties around the legality of many space activities. As a result, it is imperative for nations to collaborate on information-sharing, develop modern space norms, and build technologies that promote responsible behavior in space. Ensuring that space remains secure and sustainable for future generations requires a collective approach, leading countries to emphasize space security in their policies, bilateral partnerships, and multilateral engagements.

Speakers
 

Marjolijn van Deelen

Special Envoy for Space
European External Action Service
 

Anupam Ray

Ambassador and Permanent Representative of India to the Conference of Disarmament
 

Anirudh Sharma

Chief Executive Officer
Digantara
Moderator
 

Konark Bhandari

Fellow, Technology & Society Program
Carnegie India
Conversation: DPI and Climate Change
Speakers
 

Guilherme Alberto Almeida de Almeida

Program Director, Ministry of Management and Innovation in Public Services
Brazil
 

Sujith Nair

Chief Executive Officer and Co-founder
Foundation for Interoperability in Digital Economy
Moderator
 

Rahul Matthan

Partner
Trilegal
Talk: DPI in Action

Digital Public Infrastructure is revolutionizing public services and creating economic opportunities globally, particularly in Global South countries. Aadhaar and Unified Payments Interface (UPI) have created seamless digital ecosystems for India—which successfully highlighted DPI during its G20 presidency. Nigeria has leveraged digital identity and payment systems and looks to build data exchanges next, Malawi is deploying DPI-as-a-packaged-Solution (Daas) on a pilot G2P project for post-disaster social support payments, Papua New Guinea is expanding digital connectivity despite cybersecurity vulnerabilities, Morocco has displayed digital transformation of administrative and educational services, while countries like Dominican Republic have committed to the UNDP led 50-in-5 campaign. However, challenges in DPI adoption remain—from data privacy concerns and cross-border information flows to uneven adoption and technical interoperability issues that may widen existing divides.

Speaker
 

Noureddine Boutayeb

President
Moroccan Foundation for the Promotion of PreSchool Education
Panel: DPI in Action
Speakers
 

Anish Kumar

Advisor (DPA-III), Ministry of External Affairs
Government of India
 

Isaac E. Vázquez Montilla

Director of Public Innovation, Ministry of Public Administration
Dominican Republic
 

Gertrude Kadumbo

Chief Executive Officer and Board Secretary
National Switch Limited, Malawi
 

Rosemary Kisembo

Chief Executive Officer
National Identification and Registration Authority, Uganda
 

Faruk Yusuf Yabo

Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Communication, Innovation, and Digital Economy
Nigeria
 

Noureddine Boutayeb

President
Moroccan Foundation for the Promotion of PreSchool Education
Moderator
 

Shankar Maruwada

Chief Executive Officer and Co-founder
Ekstep
Panel: India’s Approach to Data Governance

The recent draft rules under the Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023 provide a framework towards a more accountable digital ecosystem – through transparency in data processing, mechanisms for protecting individual data rights, and data breach notifications. Further, consent managers could help manage personal information, and age-gating mechanisms are geared toward restricting children’s access to harmful content. However, the framework presents complex challenges – age gating requires sophisticated technological implementation, businesses lack clarity over the timeline of notifications of rules, and ambiguity looms large over conditions for international data flows to be specified by the government.

Speakers
 

Bhuvnesh Kumar

Additional Secretary
Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology
 

Sunil Abraham

Public Policy Director, Data Economy and Emerging Tech
Meta India
 

Astha Kapoor

Co-founder
Aapti Institute
 

Aman Jain

Director, Public Policy
Amazon
 

Saranya Gopinath

Head, Policy & Ecosystem Partnerships
Razorpay
Moderator
 

Rahul Matthan

Partner
Trilegal
Panel: DPI: The New Marketplace

Digital Public Infrastructure (DPI) has had a transformational effect on economies across the globe, improving financial inclusion, governance, and public service delivery—as leading examples, India’s UPI and Brazil’s PIX have revolutionized digital payments, and Estonia’s X-Road enabling seamless and secure data sharing between government and private sector. Despite these successes, early private sector engagement with DPI remained limited—unclear value propositions and monetization opportunities, regulatory uncertainty, and the perception that DPI primarily served government functions made businesses hesitant to invest. However, the market sentiment is beginning to change as market players have begun identifying the innovation potential that DPIs can unlock. Several global technology firms like Microsoft, Google, and AWS recognize DPI as a driver of new markets, cost efficiencies, and cross-border scalability. Conversely, private sector participation in DPIs will be crucial for allowing rapid scalability for DPIs with cost-efficiencies.

Speakers
 

Sanket Bhondve

Joint Secretary, Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology
Government of India
 

C. M. Malladi

Global Head, Digital Public Infrastructure & Inclusion programs, Enterprise Digital Products & Platforms Business
Tata Consultancy Services
 

Rohini Srivathsa

Chief Technology Officer
Microsoft India and South Asia
 

Heba Shams

Vice President, Global Public Policy Inclusive Fintech and International Development
Mastercard
 

Vyjayanti Desai

Practice Manager, Digital Development Global Practice in South Asia
World Bank Group
Moderator
 

C. V. Madhukar

Chief Executive Officer
Co-Develop
Keynote Address by S. Krishnan
Speaker
 

S. Krishnan

Secretary, Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology
Government of India
Panel: India’s AI Summit: The Road Ahead

India prepares to host the next AI Summit in late 2025/early 2026, following the AI Safety Summit in Bletchley (2023), the AI Seoul Summit (2024), and the AI Action Summit in Paris, which India co-hosted with France. The meeting in Paris widened the summit's focus beyond AI safety issues to include public interest AI, the future of work, innovation, and global AI governance—and its concluding Statement on Inclusive and Sustainable AI was signed by about 60 countries, including India, China, and the EU yet the US, a leading AI superpower, abstained, prioritizing innovation and warning that regulations slow innovation. As a growing leader for the Majority World, India called for democratizing AI technology and developing people-centric AI applications.

Speakers
 

S. Krishnan

Secretary, Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology
Government of India
 

Sunil Abraham

Public Policy Director, Data Economy and Emerging Tech
Meta India
 

Henri Verdier

French Ambassador for Digital Affairs
 

Nitarshan Rajkumar

Vice-Chair
EU’s General-Purpose AI Code of Practice
Moderator
 

Shalini Kapoor

Volunteer
Ekstep Foundation
Author
AI for You
Panel: Powering AI: Sustainable Futures

As AI continues to transform industries—from healthcare and finance to smart cities and autonomous vehicles—it has become heavily reliant on powerful data centres and computational infrastructure. Currently, many of these AI applications are powered by conventional energy sources like fossil fuels, leading to significant carbon footprints and environmental challenges. Looking ahead, advances in machine learning, big data analytics, and neural networks will require even-greater computational power. This surge in demand invokes the urgent need to transition to green data centres, adopt cleaner and renewable energy sources to power AI applications, and explore innovative solutions such as edge computing wherever possible.

Speakers
 

Urmi Tat

Manager, Public Policy and Government Affairs
Salesforce, India
 

Bikas Kumar Singh

Vice President & India Head, Government Affairs
SAP
 

Mahaveer Singhvi

Joint Secretary (NEST), Ministry of External Affairs
Government of India
 

Srinivas Varadarajan

Chief Executive Officer
Vigyanlabs
Moderator
 

Shruti Sharma

Fellow, Technology & Society Program
Carnegie India
Marquee Panel: ‘Sambhavna’: Next Is What?

Geopolitics today is defined by intensifying rivalries, shifting alliances, and emerging technological and economic power plays. Trump’s evolving stance on Russia has reopened diplomatic channels between Washington and Moscow but has strained U.S.-Europe relations, pushing the EU toward greater strategic autonomy. At the same time, China is leveraging transatlantic tensions to deepen ties with Europe, signalling a broader realignment of global alliances. The Trump administration’s new tariffs may boost U.S. manufacturing but do not eliminate dependence on global supply chains, particularly for rare earths, semiconductors, and green energy materials. With China dominating rare earth production, the U.S. is turning to alternative suppliers like Australia, Canada, Vietnam, and Brazil. Meanwhile, India is pursuing a multifaceted geopolitical strategy—strengthening EU ties, managing trade tensions with the U.S., maintaining strategic autonomy, enhancing defence capabilities, and expanding partnerships in Central Europe.

Speakers
 

Philipp Ackermann

German Ambassador to India and Bhutan
 

Philip Green

Australia’s High Commissioner to India
 

Evan Feigenbaum

Vice President for Studies
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace
 

Ashok Malik

Partner
The Asia Group
 

Rosa Balfour

Director
Carnegie Europe
 

Tanvi Madan

Senior Fellow, Centre for Asia Policy Studies in the Foreign Policy Program
Brookings Institution
Moderator
 

James Crabtree

Distinguished Visiting Fellow
European Council on Foreign Relations
Carnegie does not take institutional positions on public policy issues; the views represented herein are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of Carnegie, its staff, or its trustees.